Mistaken Eyewitness
Identification

San Francisco County, CA

Berdue & Wildred

Feb 19, 1851

Thomas Berdue and Joseph Wildred were convicted of robbery. The victim, Charles Jansen, was the proprietor of a wholesale dry goods
establishment on Montgomery Street. Jansen was struck on the head with
a bar of iron and robbed by two men of several thousand dollars in coin and
gold dust. Police recognized from Jansen's description that one of the
robbers was James Stuart, the leader of a feared band of escaped Australian
convicts. Stuart was also wanted for the murder of a sheriff in Yuba
County.Read More by Clicking Here

Santa Clara County, CA

Michael Hutchinson

Oct 25, 1998 (Milpitas)

Michael Hutchinson was convicted of the robbery of a Milpitas
7-Eleven store. After the robbery, the clerk who was on duty told the
store manager that his friend had robbed the store. With a local
police officer, the store manager reviewed a video/audio surveillance tape
of the robbery. The manager expressed surprise that the robber
appeared to be Michael Hutchinson. The officer agreed that the robber
appeared to be Hutchinson. Both had known Hutchinson since childhood. The robber wore a stocking mask, so it is not clear what basis the two men
used to recognize him. The clerk identified Hutchinson in a photo
lineup and at trial. At trial, the manager and the officer identified
Hutchinson from the surveillance tape, although the officer expressed
uncertainty. Hutchinson was sentenced to 11 years in prison.

Hutchinson's appeals attorney thought the robber on the
surveillance tape was too small to be Hutchinson. In 2001, he sought
funds from an appeals court to scientifically analyze the tape but was
denied. However, the San Jose Mercury News had the tape
analyzed and the analyst concluded that the actual robber is several inches
shorter than Hutchinson. A frame photo of the robber leaving the store
with a height overlay added to the door shows that the robber could not be
more than 5'8" tall. Hutchinson is 6' tall.

In 2006, a federal court overturned Hutchinson's conviction. The prosecution planned to retry him using his apparently hostile ex-wife as
a identification witness. Rather than face retrial, in 2007 Hutchinson pleaded to a time-served deal. (Tainted
Trials (with robber photo)) (Mercury
News) [1/08]

Orange County, FL

Malenne Joseph

Dec 2007 (Conway)

A home contractor hired a black woman with an accent to paint
a home in Conway, an unincorporated suburb of Orlando, FL. When the
contractor failed to pay her, she reacted by going through the house and
splashing it with paint, causing thousands of dollars in damage. The
contractor later told Orlando police Detective Jose Varela that he knew the
woman as “Marlene,” and he gave him her cell phone number. Varela
dialed it and got a woman who answered to “Marlene” and who confessed to the
crime but would not come down to the police station.

Varela found out from the woman who owned the damaged house
that she had seen a black man driving a truck slowly in the neighborhood. This behavior raised her suspicions enough to write down the tag number. Varela traced the tag number to a man with a last name of Joseph. He
then went fishing through the motor vehicle records for a black woman named
“Marlene,” who might be a relative of the truck owner. He came up with
a Malenne Joseph. He got a photocopy of her driver's license picture
and showed it to the owner of the house and her sister. Both
identified Malenne as the painter who worked at the house.

Malenne, a Haitian woman, had an accent like that ascribed to
the painter. She was brought to trial in June 2010. Although she
said she was not a painter and had never met any of the people who accused
her, she was identified in court as the perpetrator. Over defense
objections, Detective Varela testified that she confessed to the crime over
the phone. Malenne was convicted of felony criminal mischief and sent
to jail.

When new lawyers took over her case they found out the cell
phone number Varela had dialed belonged to a woman named “Merline” whose
last name was not Joseph. Like their client, the woman was Haitian and
shared some facial similarities with her. The lawyers also found work
records which showed Malenne was working elsewhere on two of the days she
supposedly was painting. When they informed the contractor that their
client was 5'2" tall, he said he knew she could not be the painter as he was
5'6" and remembered the painter as being slightly taller than himself, about
5'7". He signed an affidavit reversing his trial identification. Malenne was released from jail after being incarcerated for 77 days. A
motion was filed to overturn her conviction. Prosecutors decided not
to charge the other “Marlene” with the crime as the statute of limitations
for it had run out. (Orlando
Sentinel) (TIJ)
[12/10]

Polk County, FL

Jeffrey Streeter

Apr 1980

Jeffrey Streeter was convicted of a crime for which he was
never arrested. Streeter went to the local courthouse in Bartow, FL on
July 15, 1980 to pick up his brother who was due to be sentenced to
probation on a robbery charge. Also at the courthouse was an attorney
named Warren Dawson. Dawson represented defendant Lee Marvin Anderson
who was being tried that day on misdemeanor charges of assault, battery, and
resisting arrest without violence. Dawson did not believe that
witnesses against Anderson had any independent recollection of who Anderson
was. To prove his point, Dawson asked Streeter to do him a favor and
to sit at the defendant's table during the trial where the defendant usually
sits. Streeter agreed and sat in the defendant's chair. Anderson, the defendant, meanwhile sat in the spectator's section of the
courtroom.

After the non-jury bench trial began, three prosecution
witnesses identified 19-year-old Streeter as the person who committed
Anderson's alleged offenses. According to the testimony, the assailant
was angry that Francis Garell's car was parked too close to his and knocked
Garrell down. Streeter subsequently testified he was not Lee Marvin
Anderson. He even showed the judge his driver's license. Dawson told
the judge that Streeter was not the defendant, and called the real
defendant, Anderson, to the front of the courtroom and Anderson identified
himself. According to Dawson, the judge would not even listen, he
would not even hear from Anderson.

The judge, Edward Threadgill, Jr., dismissed the assault and
resisting arrest charges against Streeter because the presented testimony
did not support them. However, he convicted Streeter of battery and
sent him to jail. Streeter was subsequently released from custody
after spending 18 hours in jail. His conviction was dismissed two
weeks later.

Streeter and Anderson were both black. In regard to his
incorrect identification, Garrell, 67, said that there were few blacks in
Johnstown, PA where he worked before retiring to Florida. “Since he
was sitting at the defense table, I just assumed that was the man. So
did everyone else. If they had the real man up there I couldn't be
certain I could identify him. It happened three months ago and it was
getting dusk.” (Newspaper
Accounts) [12/08]

St. Tammany Parish, LA

Dennis Brown

Sept 1984 (Covington)

In Sept. 1984, a woman was raped in Covington, LA. Dennis
Brown was not even a suspect in the rape, but he had unwisely volunteered to
serve as a filler in a police lineup. The victim had only seen the eyes of
her masked assailant, but she identified Brown in the lineup and at trial. On the basis of this identification, Brown was prosecuted and convicted. He
served 19 years of a life sentence before DNA tests exonerated him in 2004.
(IP) (IPNO)

Suffolk County, MA

Herbert T. Andrews

1913

Herbert T. Andrews was charged with forging over 40 checks and
convicted of forging 17 of them. Seventeen witnesses came forward and
identified Andrews as the man who passed bad checks to them. While Andrews
was imprisoned awaiting trial, similar bad checks continued to be passed in
the Boston area. After police caught the perpetrator, Earle Barnes, he
confessed to passing many of the checks for which Andrews was convicted. Andrews' trial prosecutor agreed to a new trial motion and nol prossed
the indictment. Writing afterwards about the case, the trial prosecutor
noted that Andrews and the actual perpetrator “were as dissimilar in
appearance as could be. There was several inches difference in height and
there wasn't a similarity about them. To this day I can't understand the
positiveness of those witnesses.” (CIPM) (CTI)
[10/05]

Suffolk County, MA

Peter Vaughn

Jan 6, 1983

Peter C. Vaughn served three years for an armed robbery of a
Star Market. Security cameras showed that the same perpetrator robbed the
market two months later, when Vaughn was in custody. Nevertheless, the
trial court denied a directed verdict of acquittal and the jury found him
guilty. The Appeals Court for Suffolk County reversed Vaughn's conviction,
and entered a verdict of acquittal. The court found that the “only rational
explanation” for the evidence was that “the same person was involved in both
robberies” and that Vaughn could not have committed the second one. (CIPM) (Appeal)
[11/05]

Wayne County, MI

Dominique Brim

Apr 15, 2002 (Lincoln Park)

A security guard at the Sears store in Lincoln Park stopped a
woman leaving the store on April 15, 2002 with $1,300 in unpaid merchandise. In an attempt to get away, the woman severely bit the guard. After
being arrested, the woman was taken to a police station where she told
police her address, her phone number, that she was 15-years-old, and that
her name was Dominique Brim. She was allowed to leave without being
booked.

Two weeks later, 15-year-old Dominique Brim was charged with
retail fraud and felony assault. She claimed she had not been at the
store on April 15 and that she had not been arrested. In court,
several Sears employees, including the security guard, identified her as the
person who was apprehended and who bit the guard. The judge did not
believe Brim's mistaken identity defense and convicted her on both counts.

However, Brim's vehement claim that she was the wrong person
did impress Sears officials enough to review their store videotape of the
April 15 incident. They discovered that Brim was not the
person who was involved in the incident. After the prosecutor and
Brim's lawyer were contacted, the judge vacated her conviction before she
was sentenced. The woman on the tape was later identified as Chalaunda
Latham. She was not 15-years-old, she was 25. Latham was able to
pass herself off as Brim because she was a friend of Brim's sister. Prosecutors decided not to charge Latham because the Sears employees had
already given sworn testimony that Brim was responsible for the theft and
security guard assault. (Justice:
Denied) [3/07]

St. Louis City, MO

Anthony Woods

Oct 10, 1983

Anthony D. Woods was convicted of raping a 15-year-old girl. The victim was sure Woods raped her, even though she initially described her
assailant as four years older, four inches shorter, and skinnier than
Woods. She also had said her assailant had a beard, but Woods had no hair
between his mustache and “chin fuzz.” Woods' attorney noted that the girl
did not pick Woods out of a book of hundreds of photographs that police
showed her after she was raped. Instead, she picked the first unknown man
to walk by her house that day. DNA tests exonerated Woods in 2005. (IP)
[6/05]

Essex County, NJ

Berryman & Bunch

Mar 1983

Earl Berryman and Michael Bunch were convicted of a 1983 rape. Bunch later died of illness in prison. U.S. District Judge Dickinson
R. Debevoise expressed “very serious doubt” that Berryman was involved in
the crime. A Centurion Ministries investigation showed that the lead
police investigator in the case also had grave doubts about the victim's
identification of Berryman.

The victim initially identified Berryman and Bunch from a mug
book labeled “B,” which contained photographs of all individuals with names
beginning with that letter. The victim had earlier reviewed the “A”
book and was told by police that, unless she could identify the suspects
quickly, she would have to look through mug books for each of the 26 letters
of the alphabet, each containing more than 150 pictures. The record
also shows that she gave vastly different physical descriptions of her
assailants on three separate occasions, all of which varied substantially
from Berryman's and Bunch's actual physical features. (NACDL)
(CM)
[7/05]

New York County, NY

Michael Mercer

Mar 19, 1991

Michael Mercer was convicted of accosting a 17-year-old in the
elevator of a Manhattan building, forcing her to the roof, then robbing and
raping her. The building was at 1405 Park Avenue, near 104th Street. The
victim returned to the building two months after her assault, identified
Mercer as her assailant, and yelled to passers-by, “Stop him! Stop him!” A
crowd caught Mercer, beat him, and held him for police. The beating gave
Mercer a swollen eye and several lacerations, two of which had to be
sutured. DNA tests in 2003 showed that another man, Arthur Brown, was the
actual assailant and Mercer was innocent. Brown cannot be charged with the
assault because of the statute of limitations. Mercer was released from
prison after serving 11 years. (IP)
(AP News) [9/05]

Mercer County, WV

Payne Boyd

May 30, 1918 (Modoc)

In 1918, a black coal miner named Cleveland Boyd was convicted
on vagrancy complaints. He was sentenced to 30 days in jail and fined $25. The judge who convicted him, Squire H. E. Cook, and a deputy sheriff, A. M.
Godfrey, then prepared to take him to the jail at Matoaka. Boyd, however,
pleaded to stop at his home about 100 yards away where he could exchange his
new shoes for older, more comfortable ones. On stopping at his home, Boyd
retrieved a revolver and shot the judge twice, mortally wounding him. The
deputy sheriff fled for his life. Boyd fled into the hills and escaped
capture.Read More by Clicking Here